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posted by LaminatorX on Friday November 28 2014, @03:10PM   Printer-friendly
from the power-concedes-nothing-without-a-demand dept.

The Center for American Progress reports:

On Tuesday evening, the San Francisco Board of Supervisors unanimously passed the Retail Workers Bill of Rights, the country's first-ever legislation aimed at improving life for retail employees.

The new rules will require retail chains that have 11 or more locations across the country and employ 20 or more people in San Francisco to provide advance notice of schedules, improve the treatment of part-time employees, and give current workers the opportunity to take on more hours before hiring new people. Employers will have to give their workers at least two weeks' advance notice of their schedules, and if they fail to do so they will have to give those workers additional "predictability pay." Workers also get paid if they're required to be on call but their shifts are canceled. Employers will have to give part-time employees the same starting wage as those working full time in the same position and access to the same benefits.

The bill's passage comes at a time when erratic schedules are increasingly wrecking havoc on people's lives, particularly in retail. Nearly half of part-time workers and just under 40 percent of full-time ones only find out their schedules a week or less in advance.(NYT paywall) In a survey of more than 200 retail employees in New York City, nearly 40 percent said they don't get a set minimum of hours they'll work each week and a quarter are required to be on call for shifts, often finding out just hours ahead of time that they'll have to go to work. Many say schedules are posted on Saturdays for workweeks that start on Sunday.

Workers also show up just to be told to go home thanks to computer software that uses algorithms to determine if there are too many employees compared to sales volume. McDonald's employees have sued the company over its use of exactly this technology.

At the same time, workers often struggle to get enough hours to survive. [...] getting more hours or full-time status is treated like a reward and docking hours is used as a punishment.

[...]Bills similar to its Retail Workers Bill of Rights are being pushed in Milwaukee, New York, and Santa Clara, California. Federal lawmakers have taken notice as well. In July, Reps. George Miller (D-CA) and Rosa DeLauro (D-CT) introduced the Schedules that Work Act(PDF).

 
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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday November 30 2014, @05:21AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday November 30 2014, @05:21AM (#121208)

    You, and any robot created to lay brick, will fail miserably. It is very much a skill and can not be automated

    The very same thing was said about welders, and now welding machines make more consistent and stronger welds on ship hulls than any human could ever make.

    Even the best.

    So hang onto your hat, bitch, because the axe is swinging for your neck.

  • (Score: 2) by The Mighty Buzzard on Sunday November 30 2014, @11:17AM

    by The Mighty Buzzard (18) Subscriber Badge <themightybuzzard@proton.me> on Sunday November 30 2014, @11:17AM (#121249) Homepage Journal

    And yet welding is still an extremely lucrative career. Woops, there goes your theory.

    --
    My rights don't end where your fear begins.
    • (Score: 2) by Whoever on Sunday November 30 2014, @07:49PM

      by Whoever (4524) on Sunday November 30 2014, @07:49PM (#121307) Journal

      And yet welding is still an extremely lucrative career. Woops, there goes your theory.

      Lucrative, for the very few left doing it.